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[불교철학 초청강연]Dr. Jakub Zamorski - "A Clash of Epistemologies? A Buddhologist’s Look at the Chinese Encounter with Christianity in the 17th century"
분류 콜로키움 날짜 2024-11-19 15:29 조회 142
- 일 시: 2024. 11. 26.(화) 오후 5:00~7:00
- 장 소: 인문대학 6동 403호(철학사상연구소)
- 강연자: Dr. Jakub Zamorski(Jagiellonian University in Kraków)
- 제 목: A Clash of Epistemologies? A Buddhologist’s Look at the Chinese Encounter with 
Christianity in the 17th century


강연개요:
Some of the Catholic (mostly Jesuit) missionaries who introduced Christianity to China during the 
late Ming and early Qing periods were also engaged in the project of “Sinicizing” Aristotelian philosophy. 
A key aspect of this endeavour was the promotion of logical reasoning as a universal, non-confessional
standard for evaluating beliefs and arguments. By employing correct reasoning, the missionaries 
aimed to expose the fallacies of local (primarily Buddhist) thought and demonstrate the truths of 
Christianity. In doing so, they provided a new, Chinese context for the epistemological distinction
between philosophical reason and religious faith—an essential theme of early modern Western thought.

An important assumption behind these efforts was the belief that Chinese intellectual tradition 
lacked a systematic study of reasoning akin to Aristotelian logic and dialectics. However, the 
17th-century Chinese Buddhist monks, who were among the fiercest intellectual opponents of 
Christianity, were not uniformly indifferent to such issues. Some of them were familiar with the so-called
“science of reasons” (yinming 因明) – a discipline that was transmitted from India in the 7th century and
partially revived in the late Ming. Its purpose was fairly similar to the one which Catholic missionaries 
assigned to Aristotelian logic: namely, it sought to “refute heterodox views and establish correct views” 
by applying objectively verifiable standards of valid reasoning and justified beliefs. Late-Ming Buddhist
scholiasts had their own theory of knowledge, which emphasized the distinction between conceptual 
and non-conceptual cognition and prioritized direct insight into the true nature of the mind. They also 
employed concepts such as xin 信 (faith) and li 理 (rational principle[s]), but understood them differently 
from how they were used in Chinese Christian texts.

Building on these observations, in my talk I will attempt to reexamine the encounter between Buddhists
and Christians in 17th-century China, not merely as a clash of two faiths, but as an interaction between
two competing theories of correct knowledge-both of which had religious purposes yet claimed to represent
universal standards of rationality. I will discuss whether, and how, Buddhist and Christian authors of the 
17th century addressed this tension in their polemical and apologetic writings.


강연자 소개:

Jakub Zamorski, PhD, assistant professor in the Centre for Comparative Studies of Civilisations at the 
Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland. He researches and publishes on early modern and modern
Buddhist thought in East Asia (in particular China and Japan). He is the author of journal articles 
(e.g. Studies in Chinese Religions, Journal of Chinese Buddhist Studies, Wiener Zeitschrift für die 
Kunde Südasiens, etc.), chapters in monographs, as well as entries in the Brill Encyclopedia of Buddhism
and Routledge Research Encyclopedia of Chinese Studies, among others. His current research focuses
on Buddhist approaches to argumentation and reasoning in late imperial China. He is a recipient of the
Research Grant for Foreign Scholars in Chinese Studies awarded by the National Central Library in 
Taipei for the year 2024.